Tag Archives: men

It can be relatively easy to be kind to someone else. But how kind are you to yourself?

Kindness begins with being thoughtful about how you speak to yourself about yourself. Be aware of negative thinking about the past or the future as it can be very painful. Draw yourself back into the present moment by searching out three things you can see and focus on, noticing three things you can smell, and three things you can touch. Doing so helps you to concentrate on what’s working in your life.

Self-talk tends to be repetitive. Telling yourself stories about what you believe happened, or what you think will happen is painful. Thinking these stories will protect you from failure, or make you feel safe, is a form of avoidance. Blaming yourself over what has happened in the past is unkind and isolating.

Maximise the present moment by reading or listening to something inspirational, then share this with a friend or family member. By sharing small moments, connecting to others can help overcome the sense of isolation that you may feel. Make sure you look for and make several connections in a day.

Self-compassion is a powerful tool for kindness. Don’t bully, guilt, or shame yourself about what’s happening around you. As soon as you feel yourself ‘should-ing’ yourself around, talk to yourself in a kind, supportive and caring way so that you can do better next time. Nothing beats the loneliness of being unkind to yourself.

Heightened self-care is an act of personal bravery. Focus on improving yourself before saving the world. If you’re tweeting about what’s going on somewhere else in the world and not looking after your own levels of stress and anxiety, you’re going to feel hopeless.

The approval and validation we seek is an inside job. Hope is a by-product of the strength and dignity felt inside. We contribute most to saving our world, by saving ourselves first. When we board an airplane, the flight attendant tells us that in case of an emergency, first give ourselves oxygen, then help others. When we take steps to develop our emotional health, we can then put our hand out to help others.

Let go of seeking approval from others, look after yourself physically and emotionally, and being true to yourself. Integrity-based sacred service begins when you treat yourself with the same integrity as the external customer: family, friends, and colleagues.

A key question you could ask yourself about your relationship is, ‘If I were married to yourself, how long would it last?’ I am surprised to be constantly told by seemingly kind, caring people that, for them, they doubt the marriage would last very long. The most intimate relationship you can ever have, is the one you have with yourself. Having a kind and honest relationship with yourself can be the ultimate in human understanding.

 

How I Made a Documentary

 

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In 2015, I wrote a children’s book, Two Pennies, I had no idea that it would find its way into a documentary or that I would become the co-producer and screenwriter of my first documentary, Never Forget Australia. Then I heard about the remarkable story of a little French war orphan’s journey from the battlefields of France to the Australian outback. I was spellbound; compelled to write about it. Continue reading How I Made a Documentary

Big Magic

magic3I was stuck in a very familiar place recently. A place where, for
minutes, hours, but thankfully never days, I give up on my creative juices. I wallow in misguided thoughts and negativity.

 

I am writing a novel about a young woman who finds herself back in 1916 behind enemy lines at the Western Front, during World War 1. She wants to right a wrong and in doing so meets her grandfather as a young man and falls in love with a gorgeous Frenchman. It’s a love story about choices, hope and redemption.

 

I was at the stage in my writing where I sometimes say to myself, ‘Is this shit? Really? What am I doing? Are these characters ever going to come to life? Can I really write? Who am I kidding?’ Apparently having 26 published books, some bestsellers in Australia, doesn’t relieve me of these insecurities.

 

So this time I turned to Elizabeth Gilbert of Eat, Pray, Love fame. She has written Big Magic, a book which for me is a kind of handbook for the creative spirit, for when I am lost or can’t find my way. Big Magic is not just for writers, it’s for everyone, because Elizabeth believes that everyone can access their creative ability and find their own big magic.

 

So I apply her philosophy and say to myself, ‘Oh, I’m just at the stage where I doubt myself. I don’t particularity like this stage but that’s OK. It’s turned up, it’s a tad self indulgent, but here it is in all its glory.’ So I let it sit in the room and then get on with more writing. It’s OK.

 

Fear may be a daily occurrence, whatever we fill our days with. Fear that others won’t like us, of not being approved of, of not being enough, of not being loved or cared for in the way we want to be cared for. The list can be long.

 

But that’s OK. The fear already is in the room anyhow, so make friends with it. At a recent talk in Brisbane, Gilbert used the analogy of taking it with you when you drive. To let it come with you in the car. It can sit in the back seat, it can have some snacks if it sits quietly, but it can never ever drive the car.

 

Fear and sadness are intimate bedfellows. Most of us haven’t been given a strategy for sadness, it can take a long time to even recognise it as a valid emotion. Like fear, let it into your life but don’t give it a front seat. Make sure you feel it properly. Sit with it, feel where it has settled in your body. Be incredibly mindful of it and give it the honour and respect it deserves as a valuable emotion. It can alert you to what needs to change in your life. When acknowledged and cherished, it can be the starting point for new and more authentic relationships, friendships and self-appreciation. If you get stuck, try Byron Katie’s worksheet at www.thework.com

 

So, on with my writing. It doesn’t look so bad now … a work in progress, a labour of love, a tool to learn and grow. We all have the ability to access our creative juices. What are you waiting for?